Thursday's Daily Pulse

What you need to know about Florida today

If there is a ground zero for the nation’s foreclosure crisis last month, South Florida is it. With one in every 282 homes receiving a foreclosure notice last month, Florida’s foreclosure rate was more than three times the national average, according to a report from the market research firm RealtyTrac. The report, released today, measures three types of filings — initial notices of foreclosure, notices of a foreclosure sale, and final bank repossession. More from the Palm Beach Post, the Miami Herald and RealtyTrac.

Florida lawmakers are advancing a sweeping package of reforms of state economic-incentives that would require more transparency about the tax breaks companies have received to create jobs and scaling back some that don't work. Read more from the Orlando Sentinel and see our Legislative Roundup below:

Decades after its eradication, the "breakbone fever" has become endemic again in the Florida Keys. Scientists say that Floridians infected during a recent outbreak didn't catch the virus abroad but rather got a dengue strain that's unique to Key West. [Source: KUHF]

Rubio and Bush generate presidential buzz

Both Florida Republican heavyweights are headliners at the Conservative Political Action Conference, which kicks off Thursday, and both are considered likely top-tier candidates for the White House in 2016. Both also have a lot of explaining to do on how they want to overhaul the immigration system. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]

Pawn shops go mainstream

Pawn shops have become respectable. Not so long ago, they were considered a haven only for drug dealers, thieves, and the chronically poor. But in case you haven't noticed, the pawn industry has given itself a makeover. [Source: US News]

ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Colt sells for $1.8 million[Ocala Star Banner] A colt by Smart Strike sold for $1.8 million on Wednesday during the second day of the Ocala Breeders' Sales March auction. The sale equaled the highest price paid for a horse at OBS. A Belong to Me colt sold for $1.8 million in 2006.

› CordaRoys jumps in the “Shark Tank”[North Central Florida Business Report] After 15 years of business and a rollercoaster of loss and success, one of Gainesville’s own entrepreneurs has struck a deal with one of ABC’s Shark Tank investors. Byron Young, owner of CordaRoys, took his beanbag business onto the show as a way to get his brand noticed in millions of households across the country.

› Brevard construction officials: Return of impact fees will freeze us[Florida Today] Homebuilder Elizabeth Porter says things are just starting to get better in the local construction industry. But she and her colleagues in residential and commercial development fear the Brevard County Commission could mess things up if it restores transportation impact fees on construction projects.

› Miami Beach postpones discussion of liquor on the sand [Miami Herald] Alcohol sales on the beach will remain an illegal — yet unenforced — daily occurrence in Miami Beach — for now. Commissioner Jerry Libbin said he wants his fellow elected officials to hold off on a decision until the city can gather stakeholders to tackle the issue together.